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- Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.hardware
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- From: coolidge@sirius.aux.apple.com (John L. Coolidge)
- Subject: Re: Quadra 700 - Multitasking
- Sender: news@times.aux.apple.com (News Subsystem)
- Message-ID: <1992Nov6.012308.28064@times.aux.apple.com>
- Date: Fri, 6 Nov 1992 01:23:08 GMT
- Reply-To: coolidge@apple.com
- References: <sharad.720933792@murlibobo> <1992Nov5.075848.15489@reed.edu>
- Organization: Open Systems Development, Porting&I/O Group, Apple Computer, Inc.,Summary:
- Lines: 93
-
- rseymour@reed.edu (Robert Seymour) writes:
- >In article <sharad.720933792@murlibobo> sharad@mullian.ee.mu.OZ.AU (Sharad)
- >writes:
- >> I want to buy a Macintosh to run A/UX. I understand that the Quadra 700
- >> is multitasking and should be able to handle unix. My question is :
- >> Does the Qudra 700 have DMA. To the best of my knowledge it does not(I
- >> hope I am wrong). If there is no DMA then I imagine that the multitasking
- >> performance will be stuffed. Can someone please make a comment on this
- >> issue.
-
- > The Quadra 700 can indeed multi-task, and runs A/UX about as well as
- >any of the other machines. It does not have direct memory access by the
- >peripherals, so yes the performance is hampered. It's not terribly important to
- >use a DMA controller unless your doing a very large amount of I/O.
-
- This is basically true. Also, the SCSI implementation on the Quadras
- is very good, which means that you don't usually spend a lot of time
- talking to the disks anyway.
-
- >However, I highly suggest you use A/UX 3.0, because I
- >think its an awful implementation of UNIX. Right now, the Macintosh as a UNIX
- >workstation is not a very good computer.
-
- I highly suggest that you use A/UX 3.0 also (although I think it's
- clear that that's not what Mr. Seymour intended to say, it's a good
- idea anyhow :-)). Note: I'm biased -- I was a beta tester for 3.0 and
- I'm now working in the A/UX group (I didn't work on 3.0, however).
-
- A/UX 3.0 is a very good implementation of UNIX. It's basically SVR2
- (old, I know) with lots of SVR3 and BSD4.3isms. Except for highly
- platform-dependent code, most network-available UNIX software ports
- easily to A/UX. The kernel implementation is very good (looking at
- UNIX kernel benchmarks, A/UX appears to be a much better UNIX
- implementation than SunOS 4.x, Solaris 2.x, Ultrix, SCO, or many
- others). Integration with the MacOS is very clean; most MacOS software
- (with obvious exceptions -- things that work directly with the
- hardware, for instance) runs fine under A/UX.
-
- >P.S. A/UX is also quite expensive (compared to it coming free and integrated
- > on almost all other workstation type computers. Check out the Sun
- > Tsunami which will be announced on November 10th. It will be RISC using
- > Solaris 2.0 and retail for under $6000. Though, I don't like the OS,
- > for UNIX it's a great deal from what I've heard.
-
- Basically, this is apples (urk) and oranges. Most other workstation-
- type computers don't run anything except their own UNIX version, so
- the cost of the UNIX license is built into the CPU price. If you look
- at update prices, A/UX compares pretty well. If you look at unbundled
- pricing (SCO, for instance) we do very well. A/UX lists at $750 or so
- (it can probably be found much cheaper) and includes just about
- everything: the development system, X Windows (currently X11R4; R5 is
- available on the net), MacX, NFS, YP/NIS, and other UNIX goodies.
-
- As for Solaris, note that Sun themselves consider Solaris 2.0 to not
- be a full production-quality operating system. Solaris 2.1 will come
- out late this year (if nothing slips) and will be free to Solaris 2.0
- users. However, for non-2.0 users the upgrade cost is $795 (so much
- for "free and integrated"). SunOS (and Solaris) have, so far, been
- quite large and poorly tuned; hopefully this won't be true of Solaris
- 2.1 for the sake of those forced to use it.
-
- The real question is: why do you want to get into the UNIX game, and
- what do you want to do once you're there? If you're a pure UNIX-head
- who's going to run X windows and pure UNIX software, there isn't much
- benefit in buying a Macintosh to run A/UX. Sure, a Q950 will
- outperform a SparcStation IPX or an SS2, but those aren't Sun's
- current machines anyway. On the other hand, traditionally Sun's
- price/performance has been pretty poor also -- you're probably better
- off with a low-end HP-PA box (if you can handle HP-UX) or a NeXT.
-
- However, if you care about the user interface of the system, and
- you're willing to run X Windows as a secondary interface (or not use
- it at all), A/UX 3.0 is the best UNIX out there (NeXT is close, but
- IMHO it's still not as nice an interface as the Mac). If you care
- about having cheap software available, A/UX is a better choice than
- any of the non-80x86-based UNIXes (some of those allow you to run DOS
- programs). It really depends on how much you value Mac compatibility
- and integration.
-
- You might want to ask these questions on comp.unix.aux also; there's a
- pretty good community of A/UX users on the net, and they're usually
- willing to help out. You can also get unbiased (or less-biased)
- appraisals of the product...
-
- --John
-
- What do you do [...] when you list all the qualities that you
- despise / And you realize you're describing yourself
- -- Marillion, "The Rake's Progress", _Holidays_In_Eden
-
- +++John L. Coolidge++++++++++++++++coolidge@apple.com+++++++++++++++++++++++
- I speak for myself, not for Apple Computer. Copyright 1992 John L. Coolidge.
- Copying allowed only if attributed, and if all copies may be further copied.
-